There are various types of music schools in the United States. These include both pre-college and college-level schools, both private and public. College-level schools can be categorized as independent conservatories, or as music schools of larger universities or liberal arts colleges.
Many major conservatories and music schools in the United States also carry a preparatory program, which trains elementary school-age children and high school-age youths in music performance, dance, or other artistic endeavors. There are also boarding preparatory schools in the US that offer pre-professional training in music, including Crossroads School, Idyllwild Arts Academy, Interlochen Center for the Arts, and Walnut Hill School.
Many universities in the United States have schools of music. Some of these music schools refer to themselves as conservatories, and some were founded as independent conservatories before later becoming affiliated with a larger institution; one such example is the Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University.[2] Some conservatories affiliated with universities, such as the Peabody Institute and the Eastman School of Music (at the University of Rochester), are located on separate campuses from their parent institutions.[3][4]
Some universities, although they do not have a separate school of music, have music departments and offer music majors or concentrations. Such universities include Harvard,[5]Columbia,[6]Princeton,[7] and Brown,[8] as Yale is the only Ivy League university with a separate music school.